Scaife v. Clifton

160 So. 142, 1935 La. App. LEXIS 197
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 25, 1935
DocketNo. 1452.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 160 So. 142 (Scaife v. Clifton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Scaife v. Clifton, 160 So. 142, 1935 La. App. LEXIS 197 (La. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

LE BLANC, Judge.

This is a suit for damages arising out of an automobile collision which took place about 1 mile south of the city limits of the city of Lake Charles on the evening of January 9, 1933. The site of the collision is at a point where a graveled road known as South street road is intersected by a shell road which leads to Prien Lake. South Street road is an important highway leading out of the city of Lake Charles towards the south. The intersecting road which runs east and west is a narrower and far less traveled road, and until a short time before this accident the surface was not even shelled.

The residence of Mr. Scaife, plaintiff in the case, is situated on the northeast corner that is formed by the intersection of these two roads. The gate, or one of the gates through which he enters his yard to go to his automobile garage, is on that line of his property on the north side of the shell road, and therefore coming to his home on the South Street road it is necessary for him to make a left-hand turn to the east into the shell road at the intersection. ,

On the evening of the accident, he was coming home from work in Lake Charles, where he is engaged in his trade as a barber, between 6:30 and 7 o’clock, and while in the act of making the turn into the shell road, his car, a Chrysler sedan, was run into by a Dodge coupe, owned and operated at the time by Robert Clifton, one of the defendants herein.

Clifton, who is a negro, works at the Lake Charles Country Club situated about 3 miles south or southwest of the place where the accident occurred. He has been working there for thirteen or fourteen years. His home is in the city of Lake Charles and he drives to and from his work in his automobile. On’ the evening of the accident, he left the Country Club at his usual knocking off hour, about, 0:30. He stopped at his mother's who lives on the South Street road, and visited there for about ten or fifteen minutes, and then continued on his way north to Lake Charles, and it was on' arriving at the intersection of the highway with the shell road that his car collided with that of Mr. Scaife’s giving rise to this suit for damages against him.

*143 Clifton carried publie liability insurance on his car with the United States Fidelity & Guaranty Company, and that company is im-pleaded as a party defendant for the full amount of the damages claimed, that is, $10,000.

It is the plaintiff’s contention that he had completed the turn from South Street road and that his car had entirely cleared the extreme east intersecting edge of that road when it was struck. He charges Clifton with negligence in driving his car at a reckless and excessive rate of speed of between 55 and 60 miles per hour and of having so lost control of it that he entered the shell road east of the east line of South Street road and crashed into his car.

The defendants filed a joint answer in which it is denied that Clifton was driving at a reckless speed, and it is averred, on the contrary, that he was driving at a moderate speed on his right-hand side of the road. It is further alleged that plaintiff was driving his car carelessly, and that he was grossly negligent in making a left-hand turn in the intersection while Clifton’s car was approaching from the opposite direction. It is also averred that when Clifton saw that the plaintiff was going to make the turn, that he was unable to avoid the collision. In the alternative, defendants plead contributory negligence on the part of the plaintiff.

In a supplemental answer filed by him individually, Clifton reconvenes for the sum of $344.60 alleged by him to be the amount of damage done to his automobile by reason of the collision.

The lower court rendered judgment against the plaintiff, rejecting his demand and in favor of the defendant Clifton on his reeon-ventional demand as prayed for, and plaintiff has appealed.

The exact, or near exact spot in the intersection at which the impact between the cat’s took place is the most important factor in determining the negligence of the defendant Clifton, and inasmuch as the testimony of the latter and that of the plaintiff, the only eyewitnesses to the accident, is in direct and positive conflict on this point, it is necessary to consult some of the physical facts in order to arrive at a satisfactory solution of that issue.

On the eastern edge of the South Street gravel road right where it is intersected by the shell road, there is a culvert in line with the ditch running north and south and which takes care of the drainage on that side of the road. This culvert, as we understand, is embedded in the ground and made fast with concrete at both ends. The concrete part is finished with a head wall or bulkhead which projects above the surface of the road perpendicularly with' the ends of the cplvert-. The head walls therefore run east and west. The one on the northeast side of the intersection, with which we are particularly concerned in this case, was, at the time of the accident, 12 to 14 inches high. It has since been reduced some 6 to 8 inches and now stands 6 inches above the level of the road.

The measurements made by engineers indicate that South Street road, at the intersection, is 45 feet wide from shoulder to shoulder, but the gravel of usual traffic surface is 2.9 feet. The shell road which crosses it is shown to be about 25 feet in width.

After the collision, when the cars came to a rest, the weight of the evidence shows that the plaintiff’s car had been forced around the extreme northeast corner formed by the joining of the two roads. The front end was hanging by the bumper, over the head wall above the culvert, and it was facing southwest. The rear' end Was in the ditch along the shell road. Clifton’s car came to a final stop on the gravel road, some 2 or 3 feet west of the culvert header, the front end facing northeast. The front ends of the two cars were therefore facing each other some 2½ feet apart.

Photographs of the two automobiles, in their damaged conditions, indicate beyond doubt that the force of the impact against the plaintiff’s ear was all to the left side, the blow appearing to be a glancing one starting somewhere about the middle of the running board. The damage to the Clifton car, on the other hand, was all to the right front end, including the bumper, the lamp, and fender and wheel. The top of the hood appears to be out of place, but that must have been caused by the crushing of the lamp and fender against its side.

The same night, maybe an hour or so after the accident, it was observed by some witnesses that there was a track, resembling the skid mark of an automobile, on the shoulder on the east side of the South Street road, leading from a point about 130 feet south of the intersection to a point east of the east edge of the South Street road in the intersection, which led these witnesses to believe that it wás a skid mark made by Clifton’s car. This mark, according to some of these witnesses, was very pronounced and was irregular, tending to show, as they say, that he must have been driving at a furious rate of speed and *144 evidently did not have his ear under control. Some say that the mart was lost for a distance of about 16 feet at one place and then was easily traceable again and extended up to the point where the impact no doubt toot place.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
160 So. 142, 1935 La. App. LEXIS 197, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scaife-v-clifton-lactapp-1935.